Transcript Document

McKinney-Vento 101:
School Access and Stability under
the McKinney-Vento Act
National Center for
Homeless Education (NCHE)
(800) 308-2145
[email protected]
Get to Know NCHE
• NCHE operates the U.S. Department of
Education’s homeless education technical
assistance and information center
• NCHE has:
– A comprehensive website: www.serve.org/nche
– A toll-free helpline: Call 800-308-2145 or e-mail
[email protected]
– A listserv: Visit www.serve.org/nche/listserv.php
for subscription instructions
– Free resources: Visit
www.serve.org/nche/products.php
Additional Information Feature
Today’s Goals
• Become familiar with important McKinneyVento Act concepts, including:
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The role of the local liaison
Student eligibility
School selection
Enrollment
Transportation
Dispute resolution
• Engage in discussion and Q&A
The McKinney-Vento Act
• Subtitle VII-B of the McKinney-Vento Homeless
Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. § 11431 et seq.)
• Reauthorized by Title X, Part C of the No Child Left
Behind Act
• Establishes the definition of homeless used by
schools
• Ensures that children and youth experiencing
homelessness have immediate and equal access
to public education
• Provides for educational access, stability, and
support to promote school success
The McKinney-Vento Act
• Addresses the unique barriers faced by
many homeless students, including:
– Lack of paperwork for school enrollment
– High residential and school mobility
– Poverty-related challenges (lack of school
supplies, inadequate nutrition and healthcare)
– Inadequate space for study outside of school
– Lack of a caring and involved parent or
guardian (unaccompanied homeless youth)
Local Liaisons
• Every school district must designate an
appropriate staff person to serve as the
local homeless education liaison; may be
the coordinator for other federal
programs
• Local liaisons serve as the key homeless
education contact for the school district
• Local liaisons play a critical role in the
implementation of the McKinney-Vento
Act
Local Liaison Responsibilities
• Identifying homeless children and youth
• Ensuring that homeless students can enroll
immediately and participate fully in school
• Informing parents, guardians, and youth
of educational rights
• Ensuring the public posting of educational
rights throughout the school district and
community
Local Liaison Responsibilities
• Ensuring that disputes are resolved
promptly
• Supporting unaccompanied homeless
youth in school selection and dispute
resolution
• Collaborating with other district programs
and community agencies
• Linking homeless students with other
services, as needed
McKinney-Vento Eligibility
• Children or youth who lack a fixed, regular,
and adequate nighttime residence,
including:
– Sharing the housing of other persons due to loss
of housing, economic hardship, or a similar
reason
– Living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, or camping
grounds due to the lack of alternative adequate
accommodations
– Living in emergency or transitional shelters
McKinney-Vento Eligibility
– Awaiting foster care placement
– Living in a public or private place not designed
for or ordinarily used as a regular sleeping
accommodation for human beings
– Living in cars, parks, public spaces, abandoned
buildings, substandard housing, bus or train
stations, or similar settings
– Migratory children living in the above
circumstances
– Unaccompanied youth living in the above
circumstances
Fixed, Regular, and Adequate
• Fixed:
– Stationary, permanent, not subject to change
• Regular:
– Used on a predictable, routine, consistent basis
– Consider the relative permanence
• Adequate:
– Lawfully and reasonably sufficient
– Sufficient for meeting the physical and psychological
needs typically met in a home environment
Can the student go to the SAME PLACE (fixed)
EVERY NIGHT (regular) to sleep in a SAFE AND
SUFFICIENT SPACE (adequate)?
Shared Housing
• Legislative wording: “sharing the housing of
other persons due to loss of housing,
economic hardship, or a similar reason”
• Considerations:
– Why did the parties move in together? Due to a
crisis or by mutual choice as a plan for mutual
benefit?
– How permanent is the living arrangement
intended to be?
– Where would the party in crisis live if not sharing
housing?
– Is the living arrangement fixed, regular, and
adequate?
National Data
SY 2011-2012 Total Enrollment
1,166,436 students experiencing homelessness
Important Eligibility Considerations
• Reference legislative wording
• Make determinations on a case-by-case basis
based on the circumstances of each child
• Understand that some cases will be clear-cut;
others will require further inquiry and a more
nuanced analysis
• Use fixed, regular, and adequate as guiding
principles
• Remember that the list of living arrangements
included in the law describes common homeless
situations, but is not exhaustive
What do you think?
In November, Ms. Aubry shows up at your
school to enroll her son, Constantin, saying
they’ve just moved in with her cousin, who
lives a few blocks away.
Poll: Is Constantin eligible?
Question: What additional information would
be helpful?
Questions?
School Selection
• Students experiencing homelessness
may attend either:
– The local attendance area school:
• Any public school that students living in the
same attendance area are eligible to attend
– The school of origin:
• The school the child or youth attended when
permanently housed; or
• The school in which the child or youth was last
enrolled
School Selection
• Best interest: Keep homeless students in their
schools of origin, to the extent feasible,
unless this is against the parent’s or
guardian’s wishes
• A school selection decision must occur;
ideally, the parents/guardians/youth and
school agree; if not, the dispute resolution
process may be used
Feasibility
• Considerations:
– The age of the child or youth
– The distance of a commute and the impact it
may have on the student’s education
– Personal safety issues
– A student’s need for special instruction (e.g.,
special education and related services)
– The length of anticipated stay in a temporary
shelter or other temporary location
– The time remaining in the school year
Question G-4, U.S. Department of Education Guidance
www.ed.gov/programs/homeless/guidance.pdf
Feasibility
• The placement determination should be a
student-centered, individualized
determination
• There is no time or distance limit placed on
school of origin transportation; consider the
unique situation of the student and how the
transportation will affect the student’s
education
School Selection
• Students may continue attending the school
of origin the entire time they are homeless,
and until the end of any school year in
which they move into permanent housing
• Students who become homeless in between
school years may continue attending the
school of origin for the following school year
What do you think?
Mr. Daly sees your contact information on a poster in
the school office and calls to explain that he, his wife,
and his daughter, Ann, were evicted from their
apartment. They are now staying in a low-cost motel a
few miles away. He wants to know if Ann can stay in
her same school.
Poll: Which school do you believe to be in Ann’s best
interest to attend?
Question: What additional information would be
helpful?
Questions?
Enrollment
• States and districts must develop, review,
and revise policies to remove barriers to
the school enrollment and retention of
homeless children and youth
• McKinney-Vento defines enrollment as
attending classes and participating fully in
school activities
• The McKinney-Vento Act (federal law)
supersedes state or local law or policy
when there is a conflict (U.S. Constitution,
Article VI)
Enrollment
• Homeless children and youth have the
right to enroll in school immediately, even
if lacking documentation normally
required for enrollment
• If a child or youth needs to obtain
immunizations, or immunization or medical
records, the enrolling school must refer the
parent or guardian immediately to the
local liaison, who must assist in obtaining
necessary immunizations, or immunization
or medical records; the school must
continue the child’s enrollment in the
meantime
Transportation
• School districts must provide the following
transportation for McKinney-Vento
students:
– Transportation to and from the school of origin
– Comparable transportation
• Based on the best interest of the student
and in consultation with the parent, the
district ultimately determines the mode of
transportation.
Transportation
• Districts may consider other safe
transportation options besides school
busses, in keeping with state and local
pupil transportation guidelines
• Consult with pupil transportation directors
about transportation options
School of Origin Transportation
• Districts must transport homeless students to and
from the school of origin, at a parent’s or
guardian’s request, or at the local liaison’s
request for unaccompanied homeless youth
• If the child or youth lives and attends school
within the same district, that district must provide
or arrange transportation
• If the child or youth lives and attends in different
districts, the districts must agree on how to split
the responsibility and cost of transportation or
share them equally
Comparable Transportation
• Districts must provide homeless students
with services comparable to those offered
to other students in the school, including
transportation
What do you think?
Autumn was deemed an unaccompanied
homeless youth by the Spring Creek School
District earlier this year. She just moved into a
youth shelter in the Brookton School District,
but will continue to attend her school of origin
in the Spring Creek School District.
Poll: Which district provides transportation?
Dispute Resolution
• States must establish a process for the
prompt resolution of enrollment or school
selection disputes
• If a disagreement occurs, the district must:
– Provide a written explanation of its decision,
including the right to appeal the decision
– Refer the parent/guardian/youth to the local
liaison, who will carry out the dispute resolution
process as expeditiously as possible
• Unaccompanied homeless youth have
the same right to dispute as
parents/guardians
Dispute Resolution
• While the dispute is in process, students
must be:
– Enrolled immediately in the school in which
enrollment is sought
– Provided with school of origin transportation, if
requested
– Provided with all services for which they are
eligible
Dispute Resolution
• Districts should familiarize themselves with
their state’s McKinney-Vento dispute
policy, as it may include important details
about how disputes are mediated within
the state
• Documentation should be kept for all
local liaison interventions, not just formal
disputes
What do you think?
Ms. Keller was referred to you, the local
liaison, by someone in the front office of her
son’s school. She and her son, Jason, recently
were evicted from their apartment and are
doubling up temporarily with a family friend in
the neighboring district. She wants Jason to
continue attending his school of origin, but
you believe this is not in Jason’s best interest.
Poll: According to the McKinney-Vento Act,
what steps must your district take?
Final questions?
NCHE Homeless Liaison Toolkit
• Comprehensive resource that will assist
both new and veteran local liaisons
• Draws on the expertise of experienced
practitioners
• Includes requirements of the law, good
practices, sample forms, and links to
resources
• Visit
www.serve.org/nche/pr/liaison_toolkit.
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